This blog is about financial analysis of Intel Corporation. Intel Inc. is an American multinational semiconductor chip maker corporation, headquatered in Santa Clara, California.
Thursday, 19 December 2013
Intel Industry Analysis
Intel operates in semi conductors and semiconductors equipment industry. Intel is holding the leadership position in this industry with 17% market share followed by samsung as the closest competitor with 8.7% of the total market share.Read More: INTC
Intel Corporation (INTC) - Stock Analysis
Intel Corporation (INTC)
designs and manufactures integrated digital technology platforms. The
platforms that the company manufactures primarily consists of a
microprocessor and a chipset. Intel primarily distributes these these
digital technology platforms to original equipment manufacturers,
original design manufacturers, and industrial and communications
equipment manufacturers. Intel’s platforms are used all over the world.
You will find Intel platforms in personal computers (including
Ultrabooks), smart phones, tablets, data centers, automobiles, medical
systems and automated factory systems. You can find Intel platforms in
products with companies such as Acer, ASUS, Dell, Hewlett-Packard,
Lenovo, Samsung, Motorola and others. It is nearly impossible to get
through your day without running across a handful of items that run off
of some form of microprocessor.. Read More: Intel Corporation (INTC)
Wednesday, 18 December 2013
Intel Company Description
Renowned designer and fabricator of integrated technology platforms, Intel offers 4 classes of products including platforms, McAfee security software, phone components and non-volatile memory, though PC client group is major contributor to its revenues with 64% of the total share. Read More: INTC
Location:
United States
Sunday, 10 November 2013
Intel Has Acquired Kno, Will Push Further Into The Education Content Market With Interactive Textbooks
We had a tip about, and have now confirmed, Intel’s latest
acquisition: Kno, the education startup that started life as a hardware business and later pivoted into software — specifically via apps that let
students read interactive versions of digitized textbooks.
“I can confirm Intel has purchased Kno,” a spokesperson told us just now. The company is not disclosing deal terms but we’ll hopefully going to speak to John Galvin. Read more: Intel
“I can confirm Intel has purchased Kno,” a spokesperson told us just now. The company is not disclosing deal terms but we’ll hopefully going to speak to John Galvin. Read more: Intel
Friday, 8 November 2013
Intel Steps Up E-learning Efforts With Kno Deal
A startup called Kno once made headlines by introducing an
education-oriented tablet–just as Apple’s iPad was turning into a juggernaut.
That idea didn’t last long, but its refashioned business became attractive
enough to win over Intel. The chip giant late Friday said it is buying Kno and
taking on its 95 employees, the latest step in bolstering an Intel sideline that
includes designs for education-oriented laptops and a tablet aimed at the
classroom. Kno, led by CEO Osman Rashid, was founded in 2009 and first showed
off its hardware at a 2010 All Things D conference. The device, which started
at $599 began shipping that December, featured a larger screen than the iPad
and was announced along with an option for a dual-screen configuration that
would be held vertically, like an open book.
Venture capitalist Marc Andreessen–whose firm was a major
Kno investor–says Rashid was among the first to foresee the impending tablet
revolution and its impact on education. “He nailed the tablet phenomenon nine
months before the iPad came out,” Andreessen recalls. Read more: INTEL
Intel’s Foundry Business Can Be Truly Exciting
Intel ( NASDAQ: INTC )
has some of the world's most valuable assets: leading-edge semiconductor
manufacturing plants and a world-class technology research and development
team. These assets have been utilized to great effect in the company's PC and
server microprocessors, and they are likely to prove instrumental in doing
battle in the low-power system-on-chip space. But Intel is also gearing up to
utilize this to build chips for others.
This is quite possibly Intel's most
exciting growth area, particularly as it will allow the company to indirectly
participate in a number of semiconductor markets that it would not have
otherwise been able to. Read more: Intel (NASDAQ: INTC )
Thursday, 7 November 2013
Intel A Better Way To Grow
Which takes us to the mistake Intel made by focusing on “the
numbers” when given the opportunity to build chips for the iPhone. Intel was a very successful company, making
key components for all Microsoft PCs (the famous WinTel [for Windows+Intel]
platform) as well as the Macintosh. So
when Apple asked Intel to make new processors for its mobile iPhone, Intel’s
leaders looked at the history of what it cost to make chips, and the most
likely future volumes. When told Apple’s price target, Intel’s leaders decided they would pass. “The numbers” said it didn’t make sense.
The cost and volume estimates were wrong. Intel made its assessments expecting PCs to
remain strong indefinitely, and its costs and prices to remain consistent based
on historical trends. Read more: Intel
Wednesday, 6 November 2013
Intel Investors Should Not Care About The 5s' Benchmarks
The burden of driving future growth has fallen on Intel's
mobile processor division. Investors seemed optimistic about the prospects of
Intel (INTC) making a successful entry into the smartphone and tablet market
with their upcoming Silvermont Atom system on chip processors, but sentiment
took a turn for the worse after the release of the iPhone 5s.
To penetrate the
mobile CPU market, Intel would need to make a processor that is significantly
better than its competition, and there was Apple (AAPL) beating them in certain
key benchmarks - Many Intel bulls, myself included, reacted badly to this. Read more.
Tuesday, 5 November 2013
Now Facebook Is Looking At Dumping Intel For ARM
Following on from the news that Google GOOG +1.39% is looking at dropping Intel’s
chips for its server farms in favour of custom designed chips based
upon the ARM design, we hear of something very similar from Facebook.
Indeed, Facebook is sufficiently interested in the idea that it is
already making sure that it’s code would be compatible with such a move:
Facebook has taken further steps in its quest to run production workloads on ARM-powered servers.We had the speculation about Google making a similar move just a couple of days ago.. Read More: Intel
The smoking gun for this dramatic shift was a post by Facebook on the Hip Hop Virtual Machine blog on Thursday that indicated the team is implementing ARM processor support in its translation engine, which turns Facebook’s PHP code into 64-bit x86 instructions to execute on compute nodes. The HHVM is Facebook’s fundamental unit for running its mammoth PHP-based social network.
Location:
United States
Monday, 4 November 2013
Intel Has Truly Come A Long Way
It never ceases to amaze me just how much fear, uncertainty, and doubt was spread with respect to Intel's (INTC) ability to compete in the ultramobile markets. While it is absolutely clear that Intel had to learn some very hard, painful lessons about building a highly integrated system-on-chip for smartphone/tablet applications, and while it is also clear that Intel really should have invested in this area much sooner.
Intel's lack of presence in the mobile markets has always been an issue of proper investment in the right products rather than some fundamental technical issue. While I may be somewhat hard on Intel at times, particularly as it is no fun to see the likes of Qualcomm (QCOM) hog all of the spotlight (although if you're a Qualcomm shareholder, you'll disagree with me), the truth is that Intel has really come a long way and with each passing day, Intel continues to close the gap in all relevant areas. Read more: Intel's (INTC)
Wearable Technology: A Technological Fashion Statement!
What if your watch, reading glasses and
other accessories were intelligent devices whose capabilities went
beyond their conventional use? That is the idea behind ‘wearable
technology’, which tech companies are using to incorporate cutting-edge
technology into everyday accessories like watches, glasses (Google
Glass), wristbands, fabrics, fitness monitors (Fuelband and FitBit),
etc.
The different applications of wearable
technology were initially limited to the health, fitness and military
sectors; but commercial manufacturers are rapidly catching up with their
own ideas on how it can be applied in everyday life, as a result,
wearable technology is increasingly being fused into chic accessories.
Read more: Wearable Technology
Read more: Wearable Technology
Location:
United States
Tuesday, 15 October 2013
Will Google Ever Crash the Gates of Intel's Server-Chip Fortress?
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC )
didn't start off as the undisputed leader of server processors, but
once the company set its sights on servers, it quickly tightened its
iron grip on that market segment and squeezed out all competition.
Today, Intel holds a seemingly insurmountable 96% share of the server
processor market, but if recent reports are true, this might be the chip
king's high-water mark. With the PC market already in decline and no
clear path to mobile dominance yet laid down, this could be very bad
news for Intel indeed.
Rebellion of the online kingdoms
By Intel's own reports, search giant Google (NASDAQ: GOOG ) is already its fifth-largest customer, with annual spending estimated at half a billion dollars by FBR Capital Markets analyst Christopher Rolland. However, rumblings are now spreading through the tech world that Google itself -- which operates more than 1 million servers in its quest to be the gatekeeper of the world's information -- wants to build chips of its own to more efficiently power its massive server operations. Read More : INTC
Rebellion of the online kingdoms
By Intel's own reports, search giant Google (NASDAQ: GOOG ) is already its fifth-largest customer, with annual spending estimated at half a billion dollars by FBR Capital Markets analyst Christopher Rolland. However, rumblings are now spreading through the tech world that Google itself -- which operates more than 1 million servers in its quest to be the gatekeeper of the world's information -- wants to build chips of its own to more efficiently power its massive server operations. Read More : INTC
Intel’s Semi-intelligent Strategies for the Future
Intel Corporation (INTC) is the global leader in semiconductor
technology. It manufactures microprocessors and chipsets for desktops,
portable PCs, servers, and, more recently, for tablets, smartphones and
wearable technologies.
Intel is heavily dependent on its PC
Client Group business segment, and PC sales have traditionally been a
driving force for Intel. However, a secular decline in the PC industry
has hurt its profits, and smartphones, tablets and wearable technology
will be the key revenue drivers for Intel in the future. Read more: Intel Corporation (INTC)
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